Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Hello, and thanks for the input to my question, I appreciate it very much. I must admit I did not readily remember your articles Tymothy but once I looked at a back issues I remembered some comfort gathered from one of your articles in the July issue. Frequently as a student it is hard to believe we will get it (TCM) someday, as if it will come in the mail one day and all will make sense again. I am winding down my third semester attending American Institute of Alternative Medicine in Columbus, Ohio. It is a very small new school with NAACOM candidacy where they strive hard to give us the best. Thanks again for the input. Clarissa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Clarissa: As with any new profession, you have the basic tools and then over time you become more of a master at it. When I first started teaching economics a the college level, I had not one education course. I went to seminars on professional development related to teaching. I listened to other teachers. I listened to students. And eventually I became pretty darn good at it. Then I left it all and went to study . So the story begins again. I am in my 5th year of practicing alone. I was ipracticing in the clinic 2 years before that in school. In the last year, I just started to feel pretty confident in the treatment room. I realize I don't know everything, but with most people I can help, and if they need something more than I can give them, I refer them out. I do that less now than I did in the beginning. Also I spent a lot of time with people in the beginning. I think we all have something to offer, a great deal as a matter of fact, even when we are beginners .. Anne Crowley -------------- Original message ---------------------- " rissaguest " <clarissadawn1 > Hello, and thanks for the input to my question, I appreciate it very > much. I must admit I did not readily remember your articles Tymothy > but once I looked at a back issues I remembered some comfort gathered > from one of your articles in the July issue. Frequently as a student > it is hard to believe we will get it (TCM) someday, as if it will come > in the mail one day and all will make sense again. I am winding down > my third semester attending American Institute of Alternative Medicine > in Columbus, Ohio. It is a very small new school with NAACOM candidacy > where they strive hard to give us the best. Thanks again for the > input. Clarissa > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 24, 2006 Report Share Posted November 24, 2006 I need help with a tongue diagnosis. I have a patient 80+ years old. She has osteoporosis and is wheelchair bound. She came to me for severe leg pain and esophagus burning. Her tongue looks like a raw piece of liver. No joke. It is brown! Some days it is dim gray brown, lately it is darker brown. It also looks like someone took a knife and cut slices about dime to quarter size off the top on both sides of the center and chopped up the back of her tongue. There is also a greasy thick accumulation of coating about 1/8 " wide along the center. There is sometimes this thick coat around the peeled edges forming a circle around it. The body is swollen thick. -- Version: 7.5.430 / Virus Database: 268.14.14/548 - Release 11/23/2006 3:22 PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 24, 2006 Report Share Posted November 24, 2006 Ok, no one can answer his question until they answer my " orange tongue coating " question!!! Just joking. A brown tongue is most likely severe deficiency heat with stagnation. The heavy cracking and peeling is also supportive of this. The other possibility is cold. Any chance you can snap a picture and upload it? Could you let us know what the characteristics of her leg pain are? It's also possible that it is developing a stronger brown colour as she is improving. That's a start from me. Hugo Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 25, 2006 Report Share Posted November 25, 2006 A brown tongue signifies an interior burning, usually from smoking cigarette, tobacco, drug used, from diabetes or from heavy drinking. With thick coat presents excess, with thin coat presents a recovering from a condition of excess heat ; with wet fluid means with damp, with dry coat means with phlegm. Usually thick coating means the digestive problem, excess condition; thin coating or no coating means deficiency. The degree of thickness of coat is a degree of excess; the degree of color is a degree of Stomach Qi " energy " . 80 yrs old + with osteoporosis, leg pain and esophagus burning. Based on only tongue diagnosis will not be not a complete view. However, tongue looks like a raw piece of liver " dark brown " ……. dark brown means severe burning if the tongue is dry, if wet it means blood not circulating ( good circulation gives us light pink ) and the body fluids accumulated. Gray brown is more severe burning than dark brown, darker brown is more heat than dark brown. Deep cuts mean so deficient of fluid, so dry which cracks the tongue " usually from drug used, long term dryness " . Thick greasy coat ( excess phlegm ) , the peeled edges means deficient of Gallbladder or Liver which will not hold the tongue coat. The tongue body is swollen ( excess ) from stagnation , heat , damp , or phlegm . With dryness ( heat , body fluid deficiency ), red ( heat ), wet ( damp, body fluid accumulation ), thick coat ( phlegm accumulation ), no coat ( deficiency ), purple ( blood stagnation or with pain ) Esophagus burning ( heat in esophagus, from acid reflux ), severe leg pain ( from calcium, phosphorous, zinc, magnesium deficiency ). How is the pain ? stabbing pain ( blood not circulating ), radiating pain ( nerve pain, from sciatic nerve, from heat ), local pain ( arthritis , muscular or tendonitis … ). 80 yrs old ( a deficiency from wear and tear ), osteoporosis ( mineral deficiency ), esophagus burning ( heat from acid reflux, dryness from drug used, or from infection , inflammation )……. Can we sedate the interior heat from this patient ? We should ask her for more data. She may be insomnia, trembling, sometimes with chest burning and gas, anorexia, abdominal discomfort after eating, dry stool, not drinking much because of not thirsty, tinnitus, difficult hearing, easily get dizziness or light headache …….. Well, for elderly people we would try to eliminate heat to ease all the heat symptoms and burning. FIRST , we would ask this lady about the daily diet and medication, then advice her to eliminate all preprocessed cooked foods, fried , hot and spicy foods … and sometimes cut off some of vitamin use. I am sorry , I `ve gone beyond the inquiry……………. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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